Friday, March 3, 2017

New >>> BROOKLYN <<< GOP rises like the Phoenix at local golf club forum earlier this week**

Ted Ghorra,
the new Brooklyn Republican Chairman, was in his glory, standing in front of a
glitzy new backdrop --- AND ---
hosting a forum for the two announced Republican candidates for mayor

Everybody in
the local GOP and Conservative Party leadership was there along with all three BayRidge - Dyker Heights area Republican candidates for the New York City Council

I guess this
puts to bed any notions being pushed in some quarters that the new Kings County
GOP Chairman was put into the top GOP post >>>
TO DO NOTHING <<<

Let me start out by saying that this Brooklyn GOP event got lots of >>> EARNED MEDIA..... And nobody can gainsay that.

First, from the Brooklyn Eagle:“The Brooklyn
Republican Party and its executive committee sponsored a well-attended forum
for the two currently leading mayoral candidates, the Rev. Michel Faulkner and
real estate executive Paul Massey, allowing them each an opportunity to
introduce themselves and answer questions….
Brooklyn Republican Party Chairman Ted Ghorra hosted the event at the
Dyker Beach Golf Course at 1030 86th St., spotlighting the two candidates from
diverse backgrounds. In fact, it was truly a tale of two very different hopefuls
who presented their accomplishments and goals to an audience of community
leaders, concerned individuals and representatives from the media….” (See “Brooklyn GOP hosts mayoral forum in Dyker Heights”byJohn Alexander, 3/2/17,The
Brooklyn Eagle[https://www.brooklyneagle.com/articles/2017/3/2/brooklyn-gop-hosts-mayoral-forum-dyker-heights]).

Next from the Kings County Politics
blog: “If last night’s Brooklyn
GOP mayoral forum is any indication both Republican
frontrunner Paul Massey and Mayor
Bill de Blasio need to start looking over their shoulder because Rev. Michel Faulkner is
making a hard charge for the City’s top job….
Brooklyn GOP Chair Teddy Ghorra served
as the MC at the forum held at the Dyker Heights Golf Clubhouse, and although
Massey spoke first, it was both Faulkner’s presentation that drew the most
applause and genuinely excited the room of more than 100 Brooklyn stalwart
Republicans…. And it helped that
Faulkner came with a well-organized ground game including a number of campaign
workers waving placards and banners, and passing out palm cards after the event….” (See “Brooklyn GOP Mayoral Forum: Faulkner Comes On
Strong” by Stephen Witt, 3/2/17, Kings County Politics/ 2017 Citywide
Elections [http://www.kingscountypolitics.com/brooklyn-gop-mayoral-forum-faulkner-comes-strong/]).

Surprisingly, Newsday did a
feature about the event that started off like this: “The two
Republicans running for New York City mayor took aim at Democratic incumbent
Bill de Blasio on Wednesday night, casting him as an absentee leader mired in
scandals, during a GOP forum in Brooklyn….
Paul Massey, a real estate sales executive, and Michel Faulkner, a
former New York Jets football player turned church pastor, traded compliments
with one another during a forum organized by the Brooklyn GOP, directing their
criticism at de Blasio…. They each described the mayor as a politically
divisive figure, who had not done enough to reduce rising homeless rates in the
city….”(See “ 2 Republican NYC mayoral
candidates field questions at forum”
by Laura Figueroa, 3/1/17, Newsday [http://www.newsday.com/news/new-york/2-republican-nyc-mayoral-candidates-field-questions-at-forum-1.13196919]).

And get this --- even the New York Times covered Brooklyn GOP forum; and it went like this:“Paul
J. Massey Jr., a Republican candidate for New York mayor, spoke Wednesday at a candidate forum sponsored by the Brooklyn Republican Party…. The Rev. Michel J. Faulkner at Wednesday’s Republican
candidate forum in Brooklyn….” (photo captions in
Times article). And this: “With
campaigns by Democratic challengers to MayorBill de
Blasiostuck in a
larval stage, Republicans in New York City have begun jostling over who will be
their party’s standard-bearer in the general election — and quietly trying to
avoid a primary…. Some of thesame dynamicsfound on the Democratic side have been
present for Republicans: Only two candidates have officially begun active
campaigns, with other potential rivals to Mr. de Blasio waiting in the wings
amid the looming uncertainty of a federal investigation of the mayor’s
fund-raising activities that has now appeared to enter its final stage….” (See “One Way G.O.P. Hopes to Beat de
Blasio: Avoid a Primary” by J. David
Goodman, 3/2/17, NY Times/
N.Y. Region [https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/02/nyregion/one-way-gop-hopes-to-beat-de-blasio-avoid-a-primary.html?_r=0]). Needless to say the NY Times didn’t focus on
what all this meant to the Brooklyn GOP
--- as news, or as history._________________________** The title of this post was changed late on the morning of 3/4/17 to include ">>> BROOKLYN <<<" making the new title: "New >>> BROOKLYN <<< GOP rises like the Phoenix at local golf club forum earlier this week**"

Bay Ridge is going to be a Republican battleground once this race gets going. Two of the council pretenders are going to have a big money guy running for mayor on his team, the other will have a minister. Wait until the last guy figures out what that means, I bet he'll have a very funny look on his face.

Did any of you bother to look at the turnout? There were 35 people in the room and that's if you count the Press and employees of Marty Golden. Pathetic turnout. Really sad to see that this is what has become of the Brooklyn GOP.

If there were only 35 people in the house, then that would be a bit of a wet blanket on my whole "Phoenix" meme for Ghorra and company.

About ten people were identified by name in the Brooklyn Eagle article about the GOP mayoral forum. In addition, Stephen Witt's Kings County Politics' dish on the evening included this tidbit: "... And it helped that Faulkner came with a well-organized ground game including a number of campaign workers waving placards and banners, and passing out palm cards after the event...."

If your "35" number is for real, how many plain old GOP folks were there; and more important, how many new non-aligned independents or merely nominal Dems ? ? ?

Good questions GM. My source is the picture in the New York Times article. Stephen Witt is a talented journalist but will sing dance draw and state that the earth is flat if you take out an ad or give him some attention. Just look at the picture in the Times which shows a nearly empty room. In Queens one can claim that there is new energy as their forum had a couple hundred people in a basement. The Dyker Club affair was a joke. Conservatives got what they wanted, they destroyed the Brooklyn GOP and can have an easier time convincing people that they matter.

35 or 135 people turning out is irrelevant. A half dozen MSM newspapers covered it. In 2013 no groundswell of support existed for a GOP Mayor or Lhota. 2017 election will be different. Bay Ridge wants deBlasio out. Thats why this year makes sense for Liam.

The times article was pathetic. Lhota was "hobbled" in 2013 because he won the primary. Really !! The Lhota campaign had rigormortis from day one. An easy win against Jabba the Hut was not his problem.

A half dozen newspapers came and saw a pitiful crowd, of 35 people, that is highly relevant. Link this as a positive or negative for Liam, John, Bob, and all your neighbors for all I care, but that event was another fiasco. There are a lot less people involved in the Brooklyn GOP than there were four years ago and that's exactly how many local politicos like it.

Look at this one little thing. All of the Republican City Council candidates running in the 43rd Council District were at the Republican Mayoral Forum at the Dyker Beach Golf Course Clubhouse. Only one of them mentioned the forum on his social media, John Quaglione.

Does he see some upside doing that, which the other two just missed? Or is it McCabe and Capano, and not Quaglione, who saw a downside to this whole thing?

Whatcha talkin' 'bout? There's a bus stop for the B-1 line that's right there and it connects to all kinds of other nearby bus and subway lines. If there was any cause for the weak turnout, that wasn't it.

There is no excuse for this kind of poor turnout. There are still well over a hundred thousand registered Republicans in Brooklyn. Nothing compared to the Democrats but they should still be able to half way fill a room at a Mayoral forum. Hate to say it but this was the plan all along so the Conservatives could claim supremacy.

Wake the fuck up. The conservative party is supreme to the GOP. Always has been. Always will be. The Gentile staffer who is suing him could figure that out. Has any republican ever gotten elected to any statewide office without the conservative line? Ever? No.

I hear that things are not toooo cool these days..Ghorra has a very big ego and Marty cannot fit into the same room when that ego runs wild. Maybe Golden will have to bring Cochrane back in 2017....remember the County reorganizes again this year my friends....

Or maybe disfuntional Nocera will take a shot. Where has he been lately?

About Me

I formerly have commented on various political blogs concerning Republican politics. Although the focus of my political commentary has been on the Brooklyn GOP and other aspects of politics in Brooklyn, I have also posted commentary about national matters.
If you wish to contact Galewyn Massey directly, please, Email to galewynmasban@gmail.com